Thing
ContributeThe Dardanelles Memorial is the first memorial in Australia erected to soldiers of the First World War. It commemorates the landing of Anzac forces on Gallipoli Peninsula on 25 April 1915 and the many casualties they suffered.
Instigation of the memorial
On 23 August 1915 the Adelaide City Council accepted a proposal by the Wattle Day League to establish a grove of wattle trees to commemorate the landing of Australian troops at Gallipoli on 25 April 1915.
The ‘war memorial plantation’ was designed by Adelaide builder and prominent League member, Walter Torode. His design included a 3.65m high granite obelisk, to be positioned in the middle of the plantation. The memorial was surrounded by a ‘rustic pavilion’ or wooden pergola with wide openings on four sides. Four trees, symbolising the Allies, were to be planted outside the pergola. The perimeter featured more than 100 golden wattle trees and beds of native trees and shrubs. The site was fenced, with entrances on each of the four sides.
The Wattle Day League, which originated in South Australia, was a nationalistic body in favour of compulsory military training. Torode is credited as the initiator of tree planting in memory of Australian soldiers.
The memorial, to be situated in the south parklands, was supported by City Gardener August Wilhelm Pelzer because it coincided with his program of ‘beautification’ of the southern parks around the city. The memorial site, bordering Sir Lewis Cohen Avenue, became known as ‘Wattle Grove’.
Memorial and site construction
The memorial was erected at no cost to the public purse. Materials and labour were volunteered.
The obelisk was erected largely by employees of Walter Torode working as volunteers in the two weeks prior to the unveiling. Newspaper reports noted that a carter had risen at 3am to bring stones to the site and several workers living at Mount Lofty had taken the afternoon off work to assist. On Saturday 4 September a special afternoon tea was provided for them by the Wattle Day League. President of the federal and South Australian branches of the League, William Sowden, thanked the volunteers and praised them for their ‘self-denying patriotism’.
The site foreman was J Meinchke of Kapunda. The wattle trees were supplied by Adelaide’s Botanic Gardens. The memorial obelisk was cut by stonemasons from Adelaide firm of JT Brown from Murray Bridge red and Monarto grey granite.
The rough stone base represented ‘the rugged hills up which the Australian soldiers had to climb’. The smooth stone at the apex symbolised victory. Initially the obelisk had a flat stone surface on which a vase of flowers could be placed. It was later topped by a stone cross. The inscription carved into the granite block beneath the cross simply acknowledged the Australasian soldiers at the landing.
Unveiling
The memorial was erected and unveiled when troops were still hopelessly pinned down and suffering heavy casualties on the Gallipoli Peninsula. Nevertheless, the Register’s report of the occasion emphasised ‘not grief, but pride – nation pride’ and the call to service.
Governor-General Sir Ronald Munro-Ferguson (patron of the Australian Wattle Day League) unveiled the memorial and dedicated the grove on Wattle Day 7 September 1915. Speakers included Governor Sir Henry Galway, Premier Crawford Vaughan, Archibald Peake (leader of the opposition), Lord Mayor Alfred Simpson, Military Commandant Colonel AH Sandford and William Sowden.
The Advertiser of 8 September reported Sowden’s comments that two flowers typifying Australian flora had been selected for the site: the golden wattle (‘emblem of hope and glory’) and the black ‘Kennedya’ (Kennedia Nigricans; ‘symbol of bereavement and sorrow’).
The first four trees were planted by Sir Ronald and Lady Munro-Ferguson and Sir Henry and Lady Galway. Other ‘leading citizens’ and representatives of wounded soldiers planted trees, as did Helen Mantegani (née Thomas) who had been present at the proclamation ceremony in December 1836 when 11 years old.
The unveiling was followed by a patriotic concert that night at Norwood Town Hall.
Plantings and ceremonies
Plantings and memorial services continued there until the end of the 1920s. Another 44 trees and rose bushes were added in 1916. Guard rails were erected to keep cattle out of the gardens. In 1919 a wattle tree was dropped from an aeroplane by South Australian aviator and war veteran Henry (Harry) Butler to commemorate the role of Australian aviators during the First World War. The tree was planted by Chief Justice Sir George Murray and the spot was marked by a small plaque. Unfortunately, the tree no longer exists, and the bronze tablet reading ‘Wattle Day 1919’ is now in the care of the Adelaide City Council. The memorial was eventually surrounded by 140 wattle trees.
A neglected memorial
By the 1930s the site had deteriorated, the pergola was overgrown with creepers and the obelisk was obscured. The Adelaide City Council relocated the obelisk to Lundie Gardens, the site of a First World War training camp in the northwest corner of Park 21 West, in October 1940. Mirnu Wirra, Kaurna for ‘golden wattle grove’, is now the dual name for the park where very few wattle trees remain.
Renovations 1969
Extensive renovations in 1969 included replacing the original stone cross and attaching a copper plaque to the base of the granite cairn. The new inscription acknowledged the memorial’s unveiling by the governor-general on Wattle Day 1915.
Revival
Services have resumed at the memorial in recent years. Held on the anniversary date of its unveiling, 7 September, they commemorate the Dardanelles campaign and recognise the significance of the memorial as the first of its kind.
Re-dedicated
In 2018 the memorial became part of the newly installed ANZAC Centenary Memorial Walk on Kintore Avenue, linking the National Memorial on North Terrace, with the Pathway of Honour and Torrens Parade Ground.
It was re-dedicated by Chaplain Carl Aiken and Rob Manton, Director of Veterans SA, on Sunday 11 November 2018 following the Remembrance Day service. This marked the centenary of the First World War Armistice. The memorial is now located at the northern end of the ANZAC Centenary Memorial Walk on Kintore Avenue, Adelaide (adjacent to the Pathway of Honour). It was relocated to its current position from Lundie Gardens, South Terrace.
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Thanks Carolyn, we do have this on the list, we were just waiting for some pictures and input from our source who went along to the official ceremony. The ANZAC Centenary Memorial Walk was dedicated in 2016 but it was 2018 when the Dardanelle's memorial was moved.
https://collections.slsa.sa.gov.au/resource/B+77250
https://indaily.com.au/news/2018/10/19/council-candidates-slam-disrespec...
Can this be updated to reflect its new location, something like
The Dardanelles Memorial was relocated to the Anzac Centenary Memorial Walk which was officially opened by His Excellency the Hon Hieu Van Le AO, Governor of South Australia, on Saturday 23 April 2016. The Walk begins at the South Australian National War Memorial on North Terrace and continues along Kintore Avenue to the Dardanelles Memorial near the Adelaide Rifles walkway and the Drill Hall.
Thanks Ian, we'll get onto that!
This probably needs an update now the memorial has been relocated.
Thanks Chris, we'll fix that up.
The current map location is wrong. The memorial is further west in Lundie Gardens (as stated in the text for "Thing").
I've added that Kelly.
The Australasian Soldiers Dardanelles April 25th, 1915 Cenotaph should be associated with (linked to) PEOPLE Walter Charles Torode http://adelaidia.sa.gov.au/people/walter-charles-torode
not solely be linked to August Pelzer who neither initiated nor designed it.
Master-builder Walter Torode, who initiated and designed the Gallipoli Memorial Wattle Grove and its Dardanelles Cenotaph centre-piece, was a Vice-President of the Wattle Day League and his wife also served on the WDL committee.
Hi Kingsley,
It looks like this was uploaded on 18 December 2013, and the date was just forgotten. I'll amend the entry so it shows this. Jude was researching and writing for at least a couple of years in the lead up to the site going live, but I'm afraid I don't have any record of exactly when this was written, other than the upload date.
When was this written by Jude?
Hi Walter,
If you click on the 'learn more' to the top right of this web page you will see the author's sources. This includes a reference to an Adelaide City Council report which has quite a bit on the locations of the memorial. I imagine you might also find more in the Adelaide City Council Archives, as permission would have been sought to place the memorial on Council land.
Thanks Catherine. I am interested in the original site of the memorial. Is there an old map or are there coordinates for the original position? Also there is a mention in the text to a WW1 training camp on the site. Are there any available references for this? (PS - It will be a shame if it is moved again)
Thanks Walter, I think the author is making a distinction between planted memorials and those built or 'erected'. It is a fine distinction granted, but I believe the author is correct in considering this the first built memorial.
In the description above it incorrectly states that this "is the first memorial in Australia erected to soldiers of the First World War". The War Memorial Oak was established in Creswell gardens a year earlier (the memorial still stands today). However, it could rightfully claim to first Australasian Monument to WW1.
Thanks for adding that indepth detail Kelly, a much clearer picture of the evolution of related memorials.
Adelaide Park Lands War Memorials (1914‐1919) Cultural Heritage Significance Study and International Comparative Assessment, Copyright K. Henderson, 2012:
The Adelaide Park Lands' Dardanelles Monument and Gallipoli Memorial Wattle Grove seems to be Australasia's earliest national ANZAC monument/memorial and is believed to be the world's first ANZAC monument / memorial, and second WWI memorial (the first being the Adelaide Park Lands' 29 Aug 1914 Wattle Day War Memorial Oak).
29 Aug 1914 (Wattle Day) War Memorial Oak, Creswell Garden, Adelaide Park Lands, Adelaide, South Australia
7 Sep 1915 Dedication of Dardanelles Monument and Gallipoli Memorial Wattle Grove, Adelaide Park Lands, Adelaide, South Australia
17 Dec 1915 First lighting of Auckland Harbour Board War Memorial Beacon, New Zealand's first Great War and first ANZAC memorial
Sep 1915 WWI Memorial Rawtenstall Cemetery, UK
Jul 1916 South African Delville Wood memorial crosses: Weeping Cross of Delville Wood, Pietermaritzburg; Delville Wood Cross: Durban;
19 Nov 1921 First memorial to be built on the Western Front, Ulster Memorial Tower, Thiepval, France
31 May 1926 Formal dedication as a War Memorial of Chapel, St Johns College, Houghton, Johannesburg, South Africa
11 Nov 1926 Liberty Memorial, Kansas City, Missouri, USA (US National WWI monument groundbreaking begun 1 Nov 1921, dedicated 1926)
1923-24 May 1927 Vittoria Light (Victory Lighthouse) Trieste, Italy (for the fallen of the first world war).
The above timeline and comment is extracted from "Adelaide Park Lands War Memorials (1914‐1919) Cultural Heritage Significance Study and International Comparative Assessment" Copyright K. Henderson, 2012.
That's a good suggestion Daviddon,
We have a researcher working on a piece about West Terrace Cemetery now, once it is up and published I'll make sure we add it to the related articles section on this page.
Yes, this event in 1915 was held before the full nature of the Gallipoli campaign would have become known to the people at home. They had a fun day in honour of the intentions of the men who had gone to this previously unknown place halfway across the world.
Ashley Starkey's film The First Anzac Day has done a good job of alerting us to this piece of Adelaide history. And to this now little known location in our own Park Lands. Perhaps it should be linked in to historical events at West Terrace Cemetery where so many ex-soldiers are buried.
Malcolm of course the commemoration is most important, but I think Andrew is highlighting the uniqueness of this memorial among the many ANZAC monuments in Australia. It would be interesting to do some further research to see if it is the only one of its kind or if there are others in Australia.
I think you're probably right Andrew, though I haven't done enough research to swear to it. I think it's one of the things that makes the memorial unique. There'll be a special service this year I believe to mark 100 years since its unveiling.
Andrew Lord
Oh dear Andrew! You have far too much time on your hands.
It is a memorial to commemorate the landing of the ANZACs at Gallipoli. That is what is important, not when they left town.
Malcolm
Interestingly, the final evacuation from Gallipoli was on the 7th January 1916. If this memorial was unveiled in September 1915 it must be one of the few memorials to a military campaign that was still in the field.